Last updated: June 24, 2026
hashtag.org respects the intellectual property of others and expects everyone who uses the Service to do the same. We respond to clear notices of alleged copyright infringement that follow the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), 17 U.S.C. § 512, and we remove or disable access to material we determine in good faith to be infringing.
Much of what appears on hashtag.org (portal pages, images, vault media, embedded sites, and other content) is created and uploaded by users, not by us. If you believe content hosted through the Service infringes a copyright you own or control, follow the steps below.
Send a written notice that includes all of the following. An incomplete notice may delay our response, and a notice that omits required elements may not be valid under the DMCA.
Submit your notice through our contact page and mark it “DMCA Notice” so it reaches our designated agent. Please send notices only to that channel so we can track and respond to them properly.
When we receive a notice that substantially complies with the DMCA, we may remove or disable access to the identified material, notify the user who posted it, and give that user a copy of the notice. We may forward the information you provide, including your contact details, to the person who posted the material so they can respond or file a counter-notification.
If your material was removed and you believe that was a mistake or misidentification, you may send a counter-notification. It must include:
If we receive a valid counter-notification, we may restore the material in 10 to 14 business days unless the original complainant notifies us that they have filed a court action seeking to restrain the activity.
We may, in appropriate circumstances and at our discretion, disable or terminate the accounts of users who are repeat infringers. We may also remove content and restrict features at any time when we believe in good faith that doing so is necessary to comply with the law or protect the rights of others.
Under 17 U.S.C. § 512(f), a person who knowingly materially misrepresents that material is infringing, or that it was removed by mistake, may be liable for damages. Make sure you are the rights holder, or authorized to act for them, before you send a notice or counter-notification.
Copyright notices and counter-notifications should be directed to our designated agent through the contact page. This policy supplements, and does not replace, our Terms of Service.